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Logan County Legal THCa RSO Sublingual Oil from Houston’s OilWell Cannabis: 16,590mg 7-Cannabinoid Formula with 1,500mg Patient-Controlled THCa Converting to 1,405mg THC, ABC13-Featured Since 2019, Texas DSHS Licensed with Open-Source Formulas, Bentley’s 10-Year Miracle Legacy, Farm Bill-Compliant Nationwide Shipping

[page_header height="600px" align="center"] [gap height="50px"]Rick Simpson Oil (RSO) in Logan County, Kentucky: The Complete Guide by OilWell Cannabis For folks in Logan County dealing with chronic pain, cancer treatment side effects, PTSD, or that deep exhaustion that comes from years of broken sleep, we see you. We know what you're up against. You're probably driving to Bowling Green for specialist appointments, or maybe all the way to Nashville or Louisville. You're navigating a healthcare system that doesn't always have answers, and you're hearing more talk about cannabis but don't know what's real and what's just smoke. This guide is for you, Logan County. Not for investors. Not for hype. For the farmer in Auburn whose back hasn't been right since the '09 harvest. For the cancer patient in Russellville trying to get through chemo without losing weight. For the veteran in Keysburg who can't sleep without the nightmares. For the grandmother in Lewisburg looking for something—anything—that helps her arthritis without destroying her stomach. We're OilWell Cannabis, based in Houston, Texas. We've spent five years building something different in this industry, guided by a simple principle: tell the truth about the science, make the best product possible, and don't lock people out. We're not here to sell you snake oil. We're here to give you the complete picture—what RSO actually is, what the evidence shows, what our product does differently, and how you can access it right here in Logan County, Kentucky. Who Was Rick Simpson, and Why Does He Matter to Logan County? Rick Simpson wasn't a doctor. He wasn't a scientist. He was a power engineer in Nova Scotia—a working man, like so many here in Logan County's agricultural and manufacturing communities. In 1997, he fell from scaffolding at a hospital where he worked and suffered a severe head...

OilWell CBD 21 min read 4,549 words Updated Mar 25, 2026

Rick Simpson Oil (RSO) in Logan County, Kentucky: The Complete Guide by OilWell Cannabis

For folks in Logan County dealing with chronic pain, cancer treatment side effects, PTSD, or that deep exhaustion that comes from years of broken sleep, we see you. We know what you’re up against. You’re probably driving to Bowling Green for specialist appointments, or maybe all the way to Nashville or Louisville. You’re navigating a healthcare system that doesn’t always have answers, and you’re hearing more talk about cannabis but don’t know what’s real and what’s just smoke.

This guide is for you, Logan County. Not for investors. Not for hype. For the farmer in Auburn whose back hasn’t been right since the ’09 harvest. For the cancer patient in Russellville trying to get through chemo without losing weight. For the veteran in Keysburg who can’t sleep without the nightmares. For the grandmother in Lewisburg looking for something—anything—that helps her arthritis without destroying her stomach.

We’re OilWell Cannabis, based in Houston, Texas. We’ve spent five years building something different in this industry, guided by a simple principle: tell the truth about the science, make the best product possible, and don’t lock people out. We’re not here to sell you snake oil. We’re here to give you the complete picture—what RSO actually is, what the evidence shows, what our product does differently, and how you can access it right here in Logan County, Kentucky.

Who Was Rick Simpson, and Why Does He Matter to Logan County?

Rick Simpson wasn’t a doctor. He wasn’t a scientist. He was a power engineer in Nova Scotia—a working man, like so many here in Logan County’s agricultural and manufacturing communities. In 1997, he fell from scaffolding at a hospital where he worked and suffered a severe head injury. The doctors gave him medications that didn’t help. Some made him worse. When he discovered cannabis brought relief, he asked his physician to consider it. The doctor refused.

We mention this because we know that story lands hard in Logan County. You’ve got folks here who’ve been through the wringer with the medical system—workplace injuries, chronic pain, conditions that just don’t get better no matter what the specialists in Nashville prescribe. You’ve got people who’ve been told “there’s nothing more we can do” after years of treatment. Maybe that’s you. Simpson’s frustration with a system that wouldn’t listen resonates here.

Simpson’s pivotal moment came in 2003 when he was diagnosed with basal cell carcinoma on his arm. He applied concentrated cannabis oil he’d made himself, covered it with bandages, and claimed the lesions disappeared in four days. No doctor verified it. No biopsy confirmed it. But that personal experience—however medically undocumented—became the origin story of Rick Simpson Oil.

Important context: We’re telling you Simpson’s story because it’s historically significant, not because it’s medical proof. His account is personal testimony, not clinical evidence. But it sparked a global movement. In 2005, he released Run From The Cure, a documentary that introduced RSO to millions. He started giving the oil away for free to cancer patients, chronic pain sufferers, people with diabetes, glaucoma, arthritis, depression, insomnia—he claimed it helped them all.

The RCMP raided him twice. He faced cultivation and trafficking charges. Eventually, he left Canada for Europe. In 2012, he published Phoenix Tears, documenting his method. The man sacrificed everything to get this oil to people he believed needed it.

That’s the legacy. That’s why “RSO” is the most recognized name for full-spectrum cannabis extract in the world. But here’s what most people in Logan County don’t realize: what Simpson made is almost nothing like what you can legally buy today—and that’s a good thing.

What Traditional RSO Actually Was (And Why We’re Different)

Traditional RSO was crude. Simpson used naphtha or 99% isopropyl alcohol—neither food-grade—to extract cannabinoids from high-THC indica strains. He’d soak the plant material, filter it, evaporate the solvent in a rice cooker, and put the resulting tar-like oil in syringes. The finished product was nearly black, sticky, smelled like solvent, and had no lab testing whatsoever.

Every batch was different. No cannabinoid ratios were controlled. The heat destroyed all terpenes. There was no way to verify if toxic solvent residues remained. And it was always fully psychoactive—the heat converted all THCa to delta-9 THC.

The “traditional protocol” Simpson recommended was intense: 60 grams of this oil over 90 days, starting with a dose half the size of a grain of rice and escalating to 1 gram per day. At peak dosing, that meant 600-900mg of delta-9 THC daily—doses that have never been studied in controlled trials and carry serious risks of severe intoxication, anxiety, tachycardia, and cannabis use disorder.

We don’t sell that. And we won’t tell you to dose that way.

Our RSO is a modern, formulated product—designed here in Houston, lab-tested at every step, and shipped legally to Logan County under the 2018 Farm Bill. But we respect what Simpson started. His belief that patients should control their own medicine, that accessibility matters more than profit, and that the truth is more important than hype—that’s what we carry forward.

How OilWell Was Born: A Dog Named Bentley and a Man Who Refused to Give Up

OilWell didn’t start in a boardroom. It started with a paralyzed dog facing euthanasia.

Colin Valencia, our founder, grew up in McAllen, Texas, right on the border with Reynosa, Mexico. The Borderplex is one of the most dangerous, economically challenged regions in America. By sixteen, Colin had left home. He’d seen violence most Logan County folks can’t imagine. Friends killed. Friends in prison. He could have gone darker routes, but he chose cannabis—saw it as safer, more beneficial.

He became a software engineer, did custom development for Baylor College of Medicine in the Texas Medical Center. That combination—deep plant knowledge plus medical-grade technical precision—defines everything we do.

Then came Bentley. Colin’s dog. Family. When Bentley’s back legs stopped working, vets said euthanasia was the only humane option. The pain meds would destroy his organs. Colin wasn’t having it.

A rescue worker named Jessica asked him: “You’ve moved how many tons of weed and you’ve never heard of CBD?” That question changed everything.

Colin learned to make CBD golden paste for pets. He gave it to Bentley. The dog got up. Walked over. Brought Colin his ball. From paralyzed to playing fetch. Dogs don’t respond to placebo. That’s real medicine.

Bentley lived ten more years—dying naturally at age twenty. During that decade, Colin developed formulas for every condition Bentley faced: neurodegeneration (CBG neuroprotection, THCa PPARγ agonism), dementia (CBC neurogenesis), glaucoma (THC CB1 agonism), crippling arthritis (multi-pathway anti-inflammatory with CBD, CBG, THCa, beta-caryophyllene). Single cannabinoids weren’t enough. Bentley’s life depended on precision multi-cannabinoid synergy.

That’s why our RSO has seven cannabinoids, not one. It’s why we publish our exact formulas. It’s why we understand that when you’re fighting for quality of life—whether you’re a dog in Houston or a person in Logan County—guessing isn’t good enough.

Colin also knows pharmaceutical dependence personally. PTSD. Xanax addiction. He quit benzos cold turkey using the cannabinoid knowledge he developed for Bentley. Our Peace Gummies were born from midnight experiments during benzo withdrawal. Colin personally uses the vape form for insomnia and severe PTSD. This isn’t theoretical. He lived it.

The ABC13 Record: Seven Features, Four Years, Zero Marketing

We don’t buy ads. We earn trust.

Between 2019 and 2023, ABC13 Houston—the ABC affiliate in America’s fourth-largest city—featured Colin and OilWell in seven separate news segments. Five different reporters. Topics spanning business, law, medicine, community health, and politics.

What that means for Logan County: When a major-market news organization repeatedly returns to the same source across four years of industry upheaval, it means that source is credible. That’s not PR. That’s editorial judgment.

Here are the highlights that matter for you:

September 2019 — Our first feature. Colin gave the quote that became our north star: “I’m not trying to sell people snake oil. I’m not trying to sell people hope. But there’s enough research out there that people just need to know and try and have the best possible version to base their opinions off of to give it a fair shot as to whether it’s right or wrong for them.”

May 2021 — Steve Campion asked Colin why someone would want Delta-8. Colin’s answer: “I don’t give a sh* if it’s wrong to say you’ll get high off it. Maybe you want to get high.”* Radical honesty on mainstream TV. That transparent approach—saying what everyone knows but no one admits—is why Logan County residents can trust what we tell you.

August 2021 — OilWell gave away 1,000 caviar pre-rolls (about $35,000 in product) to encourage COVID vaccination. We coordinated with the City of Houston. No political strings. Just community health. When crisis hit, we acted.

October 2021 — Texas banned Delta-8 overnight, making it a Schedule I felony. Colin removed all products before enforcement began and warned other operators who were unknowingly shipping Schedule I narcotics. We absorbed a massive revenue loss to act ethically. That’s the kind of company you want to buy from.

October 2022 — Biden’s marijuana pardon announcement. ABC13 revealed Colin has a personal marijuana conviction history. “I would love to see people not get hurt for this anymore.” Every quote, every policy position, every product decision—it’s all rooted in lived experience. We’re not outsiders profiting from cannabis. We’re insiders who lived the consequences and built something better.

April 2023 — Our most recent feature. Colin called this moment a “Renaissance” for hemp. He pointed out that with what we have now, there’s nothing you could show him that he couldn’t accomplish legally. For Logan County, that’s the message: you don’t have to wait for Kentucky to legalize medical marijuana. Legal, effective options exist now.

Five reporters. Seven features. Four years. Zero marketing budget. That’s credibility you can’t buy.

The Science: What Each Cannabinoid Actually Does

We don’t hide behind “proprietary blends.” We publish everything. Here’s what the research shows about each compound in our formula—straight from the peer-reviewed literature, not from cannabis blogs.

CBD (4,500mg in our sublingual oil): The most studied non-psychoactive cannabinoid. Strongest evidence is for rare epilepsies (Epidiolex is FDA-approved). A 2024 systematic review found significant anxiolytic effects, though human trials remain limited. Pain research is promising but heterogeneous. Sleep evidence is weak. Safety concerns include liver enzyme elevation and drug interactions, especially at high doses [1-6]. For Logan County residents on multiple medications (common with chronic conditions), this interaction potential is crucial to discuss with your doctor.

CBG (3,000mg): The “mother cannabinoid”—precursor to THC and CBD. Preclinical research suggests potential for neuroprotection, inflammatory bowel disease, and antibacterial activity. But human evidence is sparse. It’s commercially interesting because it’s underexplored, which means claims often outrun science [7-8]. We’re transparent about that.

Delta-8 THC (6,000mg): A psychoactive THC analogue with similar pharmacology to delta-9 but slightly weaker CB1 affinity. A 2022 review confirmed it’s less potent than delta-9, but a 2023 scoping review found the evidence base dominated by animal studies and public health concerns, not robust human trials [9-11]. It will cause impairment and will trigger positive drug tests. We don’t downplay that.

THCa (1,500mg): The game-changer for legal access. In its acidic form, it’s non-psychoactive. Research shows anti-inflammatory potential via COX-2 inhibition and neuroprotective effects via PPARγ pathways [12]. But—and this is critical—heat converts it to delta-9 THC. Storage time can too. Our product puts that conversion in your control.

Delta-9 THC (90mg): The primary psychoactive cannabinoid. NCCIH recognizes its value for chemo nausea, HIV/AIDS appetite loss, and some MS symptoms. But a 2025 systematic review found high-concentration THC products consistently associated with psychosis, schizophrenia, and cannabis use disorder [13-15]. Our formula contains only 90mg total—3mg/mL—keeping it Farm Bill compliant while letting you activate the THCa if you want more.

CBN (750mg): Marketed heavily for sleep, but the evidence is weak. A 2021 review found zero clinical trials using validated sleep measures [16]. A 2024 sleep review concluded cannabinoid sleep research doesn’t match real-world use [17]. We include it because the preclinical rationale exists, but we won’t claim it’s a proven sleep cure.

CBC (750mg): An emerging minor cannabinoid with distinct pharmacology. 2024 review highlighted antinociceptive, antibacterial, and anti-seizure potential in preclinical models [18-19]. But like CBG, it’s being sold commercially before human trials establish efficacy or safety [18].

Terpenes (5% live terpene blend): Our seven-terpene profile (limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, terpinolene) is pharmacologically plausible. Beta-caryophyllene is a selective CB2 agonist—unusual for a terpene [24]. But most terpene evidence is preclinical. Claims about “couch-lock” from myrcene or memory enhancement from pinene exceed human data [20-28]. We include them for the entourage effect hypothesis, but we’re honest about the limits of that science [20][29].

The THCa Innovation: Why This Matters for Logan County

Here’s what makes our product revolutionary for Kentucky: THCa is legal hemp. Delta-9 THC is controlled.

Our sublingual oil contains 1,500mg of THCa. At purchase, the bottle has only 90mg of delta-9 THC—well under the 0.3% Farm Bill limit. It’s legal to ship to your doorstep in Russellville, Auburn, Lewisburg, or anywhere in Logan County.

But THCa converts to delta-9 THC when heated. The chemistry is straightforward: 1mg THCa = 0.877mg delta-9 after decarboxylation.

Your three options:

  1. Raw (Non-Psychoactive): Use it straight from the bottle. All 1,500mg stays as THCa. You get anti-inflammatory effects without impairment. Perfect for daytime use if you’re working the fields, running equipment, or need to drive into Bowling Green.

  2. Fully Activated: Heat the oil at 260°F for 45-60 minutes. This converts the THCa to ~1,315mg delta-9 THC. Combined with the existing 90mg, you get ~1,405mg total delta-9—potency comparable to illegal RSO, but created legally in your own kitchen. You control the activation, not us.

  3. Partial Activation: Decarb only what you need. Transfer a portion to a separate glass container, heat it, and leave the rest raw. This lets you titrate your psychoactive dose while preserving non-psychoactive oil for daytime.

The vape cartridge auto-decarbs at 400-450°F. Every puff delivers freshly activated THC. Onset in 1-2 minutes for breakthrough pain or panic attacks.

This framework solves the legal access problem Rick Simpson couldn’t crack. He had to operate underground because his oil was always illegal. We can ship to Logan County because ours isn’t—until you choose to activate it. That’s patient-controlled potency. That’s accessibility. That’s the Renaissance Colin talked about on ABC13.

Our Two Products: Complete Transparency

We publish our exact formulas. If you can’t afford our products, you can source the distillates and make your own. That’s our open-source promise—a direct echo of Simpson giving his oil away for free.

RSO Sublingual Oil — $129.99

  • 30mL bottle (1 fl oz)
  • 16,590mg total cannabinoids (553mg/mL)
  • Cannabinoid breakdown:
    • CBD: 4,500mg
    • CBG: 3,000mg
    • Delta-8 THC: 6,000mg
    • THCa: 1,500mg
    • Delta-9 THC: 90mg
    • CBN: 750mg
    • CBC: 750mg
  • Live terpenes: 5% (limonene, myrcene, caryophyllene, pinene, linalool, humulene, terpinolene)
  • Carrier: Organic MCT oil
  • Dosing: Graduated dropper, 0.1mL increments
  • Onset: 15-45 minutes
  • Duration: 4-6 hours
  • Bioavailability: 13-19%
  • Doses per bottle: 40-60 depending on serving size

RSO Vape Cartridge — $49.99

  • 1g cartridge
  • 900mg+ total cannabinoids
  • Cannabinoid percentages:
    • CBD: 30%
    • CBG: 20%
    • Delta-8 THC: 15%
    • THCa: 10%
    • CBN: 10%
    • CBC: 10%
  • Live terpenes: 5%+
  • Compatibility: 510-thread universal battery
  • Onset: 1-2 minutes
  • Duration: 2-4 hours
  • Bioavailability: 10-35%
  • Auto-decarboxylation: THCa converts instantly at vape temp

Both products include the same seven-terpene profile: citrus-bright limonene, myrcene, peppery caryophyllene, forest-fresh pinene, lavender-like linalool, earthy humulene, and piney-fruity terpinolene.

When to Use Each Format in Logan County

Your Situation Best Format Why
Acute breakthrough pain (while working the farm, sudden flare-up) Vape 1-2 minute onset for immediate relief
Chronic all-day pain (arthritis, old injury, fibromyalgia) Sublingual 4-6 hour duration, sustained relief
Daytime functional use (need to work, drive, parent) Sublingual (raw) THCa stays non-psychoactive, zero impairment
Nighttime sleep support (insomnia, PTSD nightmares) Sublingual (decarbed) or Vape CBN + activated THC for sedation
Chemo nausea (during cancer treatment) Both Vape for acute nausea, sublingual for sustained antiemetic effect
Precision dosing Sublingual 0.1mL increments let you find your exact threshold

Condition-Specific Guidance for Logan County Residents

Critical disclaimer: These are informed by research, not prescriptions. Not FDA-approved. Not a substitute for medical care. Consult your doctor—especially important in Logan County where many folks see the same primary care physician for everything and medication interactions matter.

Cancer Support (Chemo Nausea & Appetite):

  • Pre-chemo: 0.5-1.0mL sublingual 1 hour before treatment (delta-8 THC antiemetic evidence [9], delta-9 THC nausea evidence [1][13])
  • Breakthrough nausea: 2-3 vape puffs (instant relief)
  • Post-chemo: 0.5mL every 6 hours as needed
  • Appetite: 1.0-2.0mL before meals (THC CB1 agonism for hunger)
  • Local context: Logan Memorial Hospital provides chemo, but many patients travel to Bowling Green or Nashville. Having RSO on hand for the drive home can make those long trips more bearable.

Chronic Pain (Agricultural Injuries, Arthritis, Neuropathy):

  • Daytime: 0.3-0.5mL raw sublingual (anti-inflammatory without impairment)
  • Nighttime: 0.5-1.0mL decarbed sublingual (pain relief + CBN sleep support)
  • Breakthrough: Vape as needed
  • Local context: Logan County’s economy runs on farming and manual labor. Back injuries, joint damage, and chronic pain are everywhere. The opioid crisis hit Kentucky hard—we’re not saying RSO replaces opioids, but for some, it’s an alternative worth exploring with their doctor.

Sleep Disorders:

  • Before bed: 1.0-2.0mL sublingual
  • At 2.0mL: 50mg CBN + 120mg delta-8 + 180mg CBD
  • Evidence: CBN sleep data is weak [16][17], but anecdotal reports are strong. The delta-8 and CBD may contribute more than the CBN itself.
  • Local context: Quiet nights in rural Logan County should be restful, but for many with PTSD or chronic pain, they aren’t. Non-pharmaceutical sleep support is a major unmet need here.

Anxiety & PTSD:

  • Daytime: 0.3mL raw sublingual (CBD + CBG without impairment)
  • Nighttime: 1.0mL sublingual (full profile for sleep architecture)
  • Evidence: CBD anxiolytic effects are best-supported [3]; CBG is promising but early [7-8]
  • Local context: Logan County has a significant veteran population. PTSD and anxiety affect farmers dealing with crop failures, families navigating economic stress, and anyone touched by the addiction crisis. Having a non-psychoactive daytime option is crucial for people who need to function.

General Rule for Logan County: Start low, go slow. Begin with 0.25-0.5mL sublingual. Wait 2-3 hours. Assess effects. Adjust upward gradually. Your metabolism, weight, tolerance, and medications all matter.

How Logan County Residents Can Access Our Products

Same-Day Delivery? Not yet to Logan County. We’re working on expanding our delivery zones, but Houston is our current hub.

Nationwide Shipping? Absolutely. We ship to all 50 states where Farm Bill products are legal—including Kentucky. Your order comes via USPS Priority Mail (2-3 days) or FedEx/UPS Ground (3-5 days). Discreet packaging, no cannabis branding. Tracking provided. Temperature-stable for summer heat.

International? Yes. We’ve shipped to multiple continents. The THCa legal framework makes this possible. International customers accept customs risk, but we provide full COAs and documentation.

Address for Logan County orders: We ship to your doorstep in Russellville, Auburn, Lewisburg, Adairville, Olmstead, or anywhere in Logan County. Just verify legality at your address (it is legal under federal law, but always good to confirm local ordinances).

Payment: Standard e-commerce. Credit card, debit card. No crypto nonsense.

Age requirement: 21+. We verify.

No medical card needed. Kentucky doesn’t have a medical cannabis program. Our product doesn’t require one.

COAs available: Every batch tested for potency, terpenes, pesticides, heavy metals, residual solvents, microbes. We email you the Certificate of Analysis with your order.

The Legal Framework for Logan County, Kentucky

Federal Law: The 2018 Farm Bill legalized hemp-derived products with <0.3% delta-9 THC. Our sublingual oil has 90mg total delta-9 in a 30mL bottle—well under 0.3% by weight. It’s legal to ship to Logan County.

Kentucky Law: Kentucky has not legalized medical cannabis. However, hemp-derived products are legal. Our THCa content is compliant because THCa is not delta-9 THC at point of sale. You’re purchasing a legal hemp product. What you do with it—specifically, whether you choose to decarboxylate the THCa into THC—is your private decision in your home.

Important Notice: We provide documentation, but you assume responsibility for compliance with local laws. The product is legal as shipped. Activation is your choice.

Drug Testing: Raw THCa will not cause a positive THC test. Decarbed THCa will. Delta-8 THC will. If you’re subject to workplace testing in Logan County (many employers still test), use the raw form only.

Why We Publish Our Formulas: The Open-Source Promise

Rick Simpson gave his oil away for free and taught people to make it. We sell a professional, lab-tested product for those who want it, but we also publish the complete recipe for those who can’t afford it or prefer to DIY.

The sublingual oil formula is above. Every milligram is listed. If you’re in Logan County and $129.99 is out of reach, you can source:

  • CBD distillate (4,500mg)
  • CBG isolate (3,000mg)
  • Delta-8 distillate (6,000mg)
  • THCa isolate (1,500mg)
  • Delta-9 distillate (90mg)
  • CBN isolate (750mg)
  • CBC isolate (750mg)
  • Live terpene blend (5%)
  • Organic MCT oil (to 30mL)

Mix at low heat, dispense into dropper bottles. You’ve made it yourself.

We also published Bentley’s CBD golden paste recipe in the Rick Simpson section above. If your dog in Logan County is suffering like Bentley was, that recipe might save them.

This isn’t marketing strategy. It’s foundational behavior. We believe access matters more than profit.

The Complete Reference List: 29 Peer-Reviewed Citations

Most cannabis companies give you marketing claims. We give you the actual research. Every compound in our formula is anchored to specific literature. Here are the complete citations so you can verify everything we’ve told you:

  1. National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. Cannabis Marijuana and Cannabinoids: What You Need To Know. NIH/NCCIH. Accessed March 2026. Available at: https://www.nccih.nih.gov/health/cannabis-marijuana-and-cannabinoids-what-you-need-to-know
  2. Talwar A, Estes E, Aparasu R, Reddy DS. Clinical efficacy and safety of cannabidiol for pediatric refractory epilepsy indications: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Exp Neurol. 2023;359:114238. PMID: 36206805.
  3. Han K, Wang JY, Wang PY, Peng YC. Therapeutic potential of cannabidiol CBD in anxiety disorders: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Psychiatry Res. 2024;339:116049. PMID: 38924898.
  4. Cásedas G, Yarza-Sancho M, López V. Cannabidiol CBD: A systematic review of clinical and preclinical evidence in the treatment of pain. Pharmaceuticals Basel. 2024;17(11):1438. PMID: 39598350.
  5. Ranum RM, Whipple MO, Croghan I, Bauer B, Toussaint LL, Vincent A. Use of cannabidiol in the management of insomnia: A systematic review. Cannabis Cannabinoid Res. 2023;8(2):213-229. PMID: 36149724.
  6. Lo LA, Christiansen A, Eadie L, Strickland JC, Kim DD, Boivin M, Barr AM, MacCallum CA. Cannabidiol-associated hepatotoxicity: A systematic review and meta-analysis. J Intern Med. 2023;293(6):724-752. PMID: 36912195.
  7. Nachnani R, Raup-Konsavage WM, Vrana KE. The pharmacological case for cannabigerol. J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2021;376(2):204-212. PMID: 33168643.
  8. Li S, Li W, Malhi NK, Huang J, Li Q, Zhou Z, Wang R, Peng J, Yin T, Wang H. Cannabigerol CBG: A comprehensive review of its molecular mechanisms and therapeutic potential. Molecules. 2024;29(22):5471. PMID: 39598860.
  9. Tagen M, Klumpers LE. Review of delta-8-tetrahydrocannabinol delta8 THC: Comparative pharmacology with delta9 THC. Br J Pharmacol. 2022;179(15):3915-3933. PMID: 35523678.
  10. LoParco CR, Rossheim ME, Walters ST, Zhou Z, Olsson S, Sussman SY. Delta-8 tetrahydrocannabinol: A scoping review and commentary. Addiction. 2023;118(6):1011-1028. PMID: 36710464.
  11. Abdel-Kader MS, Radwan MM, Metwaly AM, Eissa IH, Hazekamp A, ElSohly MA. Chemistry and pharmacology of Delta-8-Tetrahydrocannabinol. Molecules. 2024;29(6):1249. PMID: 38542886.
  12. Moreno-Sanz G. Can You Pass the Acid Test? Critical review and novel therapeutic perspectives of delta9-Tetrahydrocannabinolic Acid A. Cannabis Cannabinoid Res. 2016;1(1):124-130. PMID: 28861488.
  13. McDonagh MS, Morasco BJ, Wagner J, Ahmed AY, Fu R, Kansagara D, Chou R. Cannabis-based products for chronic pain: A systematic review. Ann Intern Med. 2022;175(8):1143-1153. PMID: 35667066.
  14. Grotenhermen F. Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of cannabinoids. Clin Pharmacokinet. 2003;42(4):327-360. PMID: 12648025.
  15. Rittiphairoj T, Leslie L, Oberste JP, Yim TW, Tung G, Bero L, Riggs P, Hutchison K, Samet J, Li T. High-concentration delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol cannabis products and mental health outcomes: A systematic review. Ann Intern Med. 2025;178(10):1429-1440. PMID: 40854216.
  16. Corroon J. Cannabinol and sleep: Separating fact from fiction. Cannabis Cannabinoid Res. 2021;6(5):366-371. PMID: 34468204.
  17. Lavender I, Garden G, Grunstein RR, Yee BJ, Hoyos CM. Using cannabis and CBD to sleep: An updated review. Curr Psychiatry Rep. 2024;26(12):712-727. PMID: 39612156.
  18. Sepulveda DE, Vrana KE, Kellogg JJ, Bisanz JE, Desai D, Graziane NM, Raup-Konsavage WM. The potential of cannabichromene as a therapeutic agent. J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2024;391(2):206-213. PMID: 38777605.
  19. Zagožen M, Čerenak A, Kreft S. Cannabigerol and cannabichromene in Cannabis sativa L. Acta Pharm. 2021;71(3):355-364. PMID: 36654096.
  20. André R, Gomes AP, Pereira-Leite C, Marques-da-Costa A, Monteiro Rodrigues L, Sassano M, Rijo P, Costa MDC. The entourage effect in cannabis medicinal products: A comprehensive review. Pharmaceuticals Basel. 2024;17(11):1543. PMID: 39598452.
  21. Anandakumar P, Kamaraj S, Vanitha MK. D-limonene: A multifunctional compound with potent therapeutic effects. J Food Biochem. 2021;45(1):e13566. PMID: 33289132.
  22. Ogueta IA, Brared Christensson J, Giménez-Arnau E, Brans R, Wilkinson M, Stingeni L, Foti C, Aerts O, Svedman C, Gonçalo M, Giménez-Arnau A. Limonene and linalool hydroperoxides review: Pros and cons for routine patch testing. Contact Dermatitis. 2022;87(1):1-12. PMID: 35122274.
  23. Surendran S, Qassadi F, Surendran G, Lilley D, Heinrich M. Myrcene: What are the potential health benefits of this flavouring and aroma agent? Front Nutr. 2021;8:699666. PMID: 34350208.
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Final Word for Logan County

We know Logan County values integrity. You want straight talk, not promises we can’t keep. You want products that work, not miracle cures. You want legal access, not legal risk. You want to support a company that gives back, not one that exploits.

That’s why we’re here. We can’t be physically in Russellville yet, but we can serve you. We can ship to your doorstep. We can answer your calls and emails. We can provide the same product and the same honesty we give Houston.

The opioid epidemic devastated Kentucky. We lost too many people. If cannabinoids can help even one person in Logan County avoid that path—or help someone in chemo eat, or help a veteran sleep—that’s why Bentley’s story matters. That’s why Colin’s conviction history matters. That’s why seven ABC13 features matter.

We’re not here to replace your doctor. We’re here to give you options informed by real science, real experience, and real integrity.

Contact us:

Order today. We’ll ship to Logan County tomorrow. And if you can’t afford it, call us anyway—we’ll give you the recipe to make it yourself.

Because no one should be shut out of relief. Not in Houston. Not in Logan County. Not anywhere.

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